The present invention comprises plastic pistols and individual parts therefore having an increased use of plastic in comparison to prior art plastic pistols, reducing the number and simplifying the design of the metal parts to reduce the cost of the pistols while still maintaining gun quality. One aspect of the invention is the use of plastic in certain critical areas, simplifying the configuration of the metal inserts used. In many cases, this can eliminate expensive machining of metal parts in favor of parts injection molded to finished dimensions. In that regard, legal requirements can still be met with respect to metal content, yet that metal content may be simplified in configuration for ease of manufacture. Certain preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated.
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25. In a handgun, the improvement comprising:
a slide; and,
a handgun frame, wherein the handgun frame, including the surfaces of the handgun frame against which the slide slides, are molded plastic.
1. In a handgun, the improvement comprising:
a slide of molded plastic having a steel insert forming a breech face; and,
a handgun frame, the frame having molded plastic forming the surfaces against which mating plastic surfaces of the slide slides.
14. In a handgun, the improvement comprising:
a slide of molded plastic having a steel insert forming a breech face;
a handgun frame, the frame having molded plastic forming the surfaces against which mating plastic surfaces of the slide slides; and,
a steel barrel having a molded plastic locking block.
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/547,647 filed Feb. 25, 2004.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of handguns, and more particularly semiautomatic handguns.
2. Prior Art
An automatic pistol carries a slide/barrel assembly that slides longitudinally along a frame. A spring braced between the slide and frame holds the slide/barrel assembly in a forward and closed position. A cartridge chamber exists within this slide/barrel assembly. In the forward position, the rear end of the barrel is covered by the breech face upon the slide. A hole in the breech face provides access to the cartridge chamber for a firing element to pierce the primer of the pistol cartridge, thereby discharging the cartridge and expelling the bullet.
The firing element can be driven forward by a hammer striking it, or it can be moved backward under spring pressure and released to drive the firing element forward through the breech face to the primer. In either instance the hammer or the firing element itself is connected through mechanical means to a trigger operated by the user.
Upon discharge of a pistol cartridge, a bullet travels forward out through the barrel, the slide/barrel assembly moves rearward for a specific distance where the barrel moves slightly downward and stops, the slide continues to move rearward opening the cartridge chamber. The extractor (through spring pressure) holds the spent cartridge casing to the breech face, removing it from the barrel. As the slide continues rearward, the ejector (mounted in the frame) contacts the spent cartridge casing, pushing it away from the breech face, causing the extractor spring pressure to be overcome to expel the empty cartridge from the pistol.
Now at maximum rearward travel, the slide has cleared the magazine assembly, allowing the next cartridge in the magazine to move up (magazine cartridges are loaded under spring pressure). Spring pressure pushes the slide forward contacting the next cartridge from the magazine and delivering it to the cartridge chamber which closes as the slide moves forward. Slide fully forward, the pistol is loaded ready to fire again.
This generally describes the operation of an automatic pistol with a locked breech mechanism, fired either by striker or hammer operation. A straight blowback mechanism operates similarly. However, the barrel is not part of a slide/barrel assembly; it is integrally and rigidly mounted to the frame. The slide, containing the breech face, is held forward closing the cartridge chamber only by spring force and with no particular mechanical interlock.
Whether hammer or striker fired, various pistol mechanisms are employed to facilitate the forward movement of the firing element:
In a DAO (Double Action Only) mechanism, actuating the trigger pulls back the hammer (or striker) to a critical point and then releases it in one smooth motion.
In a single action mechanism, the pistol must be manually “cocked” by racking the slide rearward or by pulling the hammer back. Trigger actuation will then release the “cocked” element driving the firing element forward through the breech face. Following the initial discharge of the pistol, sequential shots may not require manually “cocking” of the firing element, as the pistols operation will leave the device in a “cocked” condition following each firing.
Specific to the Glock firearm (U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,539,889, 4,825,744 and 4,893,546) is an intermediate action mechanism. This device works like a single action mechanism, however, it has characteristics of the DAO as well. It must be manually “cocked” before the first discharge, and sequential firings require only trigger actuation. The sequential trigger operations do not solely release a firing element, however (as in the single action design), they serve to actuate the firing element from an intermediate position to the critical point where release takes place, actuating the firing element. This design allows a trigger pull distance that is less than in the DAO and greater than in the single-action. Most importantly, it maintains the firearm in a partially “cocked” position where accidental discharge by dropping the weapon is impossible (a single action design makes inadvertent discharge through dropping prevalent), since the intermediate position of the firing element does not have enough spring tension to drive the firing element through the breech face if released.
Classically, semiautomatic handguns have been substantially all metal, except for the handgrip, which often included plastic, wood or other material for comfort and esthetic purposes. More recently, plastic has been sometimes used in other parts of semiautomatic handguns as a means of cost reduction, though typically in conjunction with metal parts that define the critical operating parts and surfaces. As such, the metal parts are still relatively expensive because of their complexity and machining requirements, thereby limiting the cost reduction that can be achieved.
In the prior art section, pistols of various well known designs were described. In general, the present invention is applicable to such pistols, no matter which kind and independent of the detailed design of its various parts. Accordingly, details of such pistols that are already well known will not be set forth herein, as such are well within the knowledge of those skilled in the art. Instead, details will only be given as they effect the design and/or fabrication of such parts of the pistols.
In particular, the present invention comprises plastic pistols and individual parts therefore having an increased use of plastic in comparison to prior art plastic pistols, reducing the number and simplifying the design of the metal parts to reduce the cost of the pistols while still maintaining gun quality. One aspect of the invention is the use of plastic in certain critical areas, simplifying the configuration of the metal inserts used. In many cases, this can eliminate expensive machining of metal parts in favor of parts injection molded to finished dimensions. In that regard, legal requirements can still be met with respect to metal content, yet that metal content may be simplified in configuration for ease of manufacture. Certain preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the attached drawings as follows.
While the gun specifically illustrated is of the striker type, most of the major parts for a hammer fired handgun are similar, and accordingly the gun of
The plastic used may be a filled plastic, such as a fiber filled injection molding plastic, or an unfilled plastic, depending on choice and need of a particular part. Possible plastics include nylon and polycarbonate. A filler, if used, may provide increased dimensional stability, reduced thermal expansion, and increased strength. Possible fillers include glass, glass fiber and mineral. Similarly, not all parts need be molded using the same plastic, as different plastics and/or filled and unfilled plastic may be used. In general, the parts preferably are configured using good design practices, such as relatively uniform plastic thickness, avoidance of stress concentration such as occur at step changes in cross section area, and good mechanical adhesion by roughened surfaces, grooves, etc. for molding plastic around metal parts. For handguns, good balance not only of the overall gun from a “feel” point of view is desired, but also balance in terms of things like the placement of the center of gravity of the slide on the center line of the barrel to minimize shock forces on the sliding surfaces is preferred. Also, minor changes in usual gun part proportions may be made, as well as some special provisions for use of plastic parts, such as, by way of example, one spring might be used for the usual slide motion, with a second spring, or a dual rate spring, used to limit excess slide motion without the shock of a fixed slide stop.
The various embodiments of plastic pistols and parts for plastic pistols disclosed herein are only representative of various designs that will be obvious from the disclosure herein and which reduce and simplify the metal parts for plastic pistols, allowing parts heretofore requiring expensive machining to be finish molded to dimension, or to be finish molded with a metal insert of a simple configuration, the complex machining required of the prior art being converted to inexpensive molding processes. It is believed that through the use of one or more aspects of the present invention in the design and manufacture of plastic pistols, high quality pistols may be manufactured at lower cost than in the prior art. While in general the various plastic gun parts disclosed herein are preferably molded to final dimensions, it may be advantageous or necessary to perform one or more machining operations on the molded parts, such as by way of example, the drilling of any necessary holes. In the claims to follow, a machined molded plastic part or surface thereof is obviously still a molded plastic part.
Thus while certain preferred embodiments of the present invention have been disclosed and described herein for purposes of illustration and not for purposes of limitation, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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